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Paul van Dyk – Seven Ways
Tracklist
A1 | Seven Ways | 6:33 | |
A2 | The Greatness Of Britain | 8:57 | |
B1 | Heaven | 5:40 | |
B2 | I Can't Feel It | 8:11 | |
C1 | I Like It | 6:54 | |
C2 | Come (And Get It) | 7:10 | |
D1 | Words | 10:00 |
Credits
- Artwork – Marc Schilkowski
- Mastered By [Digital] – Wolfgang Ragwitz
- Written-By, Producer – Paul van Dyk
Notes
P&C 1996 MFS
Barcode and Other Identifiers
- ASIN: B00004WO9I
- Matrix / Runout (Side A): MFS 323.7088.1 A
- Matrix / Runout (Side B): MFS 323.7088.1 B
- Matrix / Runout (Side C): MFS 323.7088.1 C
- Matrix / Runout (Side D): MFS 323.7088.1 D
- Other (Label Code): LC 6407
- Other (Rights Society): GEMA
Other Versions (5 of 24)View All
Title (Format) | Label | Cat# | Country | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seven Ways (Special Limited Edition Double CD) (CD, Album, Mixed, CD, Compilation, All Media, Limited Edition) | MFS | MFS 9088-2 | Germany | 1996 | |||
Seven Ways (CD, Album, Promo) | MFS | 323.7088 .2 42 | Germany | 1996 | |||
Seven Ways (CD, Album, Mixed) | MFS | MFS 7088-2 | Germany | 1996 | |||
Seven Ways (2×12", Album) | MFS, MFS | MFS 7088-1, 323.7088.1 | Germany | 1996 | |||
Seven Ways (CD, Album, Mixed) | Nextera | ERA 9606-2 | Czech Republic | 1996 |
Recommendations
Reviews

This is one my favorite albums ever. The first disc is perfect. There are some hit and miss tracks on the second disc. When I first heard this in the 90’s I was sure that Paul van Dyk would be an iconoclast. His music since this album has been a series of increasingly conventional products.
On each album there has been music I like, but then there are drum rolls, trance horns and other genre tropes that were conventional years ago. Increasingly his only new tracks I can tolerate are the ones with slower B.P.M.’s.
It seems unlikely that Paul van Dyk would be inclined to make an “artist album” at this point. If he did though, it could live up to the remarkable promise he initially showed.
Short of that, Seven Ways deserves a remastered and expanded version. It is more than 20 years old.
On each album there has been music I like, but then there are drum rolls, trance horns and other genre tropes that were conventional years ago. Increasingly his only new tracks I can tolerate are the ones with slower B.P.M.’s.
It seems unlikely that Paul van Dyk would be inclined to make an “artist album” at this point. If he did though, it could live up to the remarkable promise he initially showed.
Short of that, Seven Ways deserves a remastered and expanded version. It is more than 20 years old.